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IMPROVING THE HEALTH OF NEW MOTHERS: BUILDING WOMAN-

CENTERED POSTPARTUM SYSTEMS OF CARE

Delaware Healthy Mother & Infant Consortium Annual Conference

April 13, 2016 Sarah Verbiest, DrPH, MSW, MPH

Objectives • Make a case for increased attention to postpartum

health and wellness • Share current challenges, directions and emerging

postpartum health care initiatives • Discuss actionable strategies for change

Definitions

• Fourth Trimester: First 3 months after giving birth (postpartum)

•  Interconception Care: Care in between pregnancies with specific focus on improving next birth outcome – generally defined as two years

• Well Woman Care: Care across the life course regardless of pregnancy intention

Healthy People 2020

(Developmental) Reduce postpartum relapse of smoking among women who quit smoking during pregnancy (Developmental) Increase the proportion of women giving birth who attend a postpartum care visit with a health worker

Becoming a Mother…

Fahey and Shenassa, 2013

TAKE A MOMENT

For yourself or someone you love who has been postpartum… reflect for a minute on what was challenging about that time. What was helpful? Share a memory or thought with your neighbor.

It’s Not Easy Being a New Mom •  Fatigue / Sleep loss (56% overall / 21% major) • Stress (54% overall, 17% major) • Physical exhaustion (51%, 16% major) • Sore nipples/breast tenderness (48%, 12% major), • Backache (46%, 12% major) • Weight control (45%, 16% major) •  Lack of sexual desire (43%, 13% major) • C-section numbness (48%, 12% major) and itchiness

(51%, 13% major) • Six months later 1:3 mothers were still feeling stressed,

had problems with sleep loss, weight control. Women with a C-section - 20% still had numbness and itchiness

Listening to Mothers III, 2013

It’s Not Easy Being a New Mom

• Headaches • Hair loss & acne • C-section / episiotomy site / breast pain – 80% of

early postpartum women • Constipation • Hot flashes & dizziness • Pain with intercourse • Bleeding •  Iron depletion / anemia / thyroid dysfunction

It’s Not Easy Being a New Mom •  Breastfeeding initiation 79% vs continuation 49% (6 mos) and

27% (12 mos)* •  One in three mothers reported “feeling down, depressed or

hopeless” (35%) or having “little interest or pleasure in doing things” (36%) for at least several days in the past two weeks

•  Postpartum depression (17%-20% or nearly 1:5 new moms) •  Tobacco recidivism (up to 70%) •  Less than 6 months between pregnancies

•  40% increased risk of preterm birth •  61% increased risk of low birth weight •  26% increased risk of being small for gestational age •  1/3 of US pregnancies occur within 18 months after delivery

* Varies by population

Postpartum Preparation • Postpartum women are not adequately prepared for

specific, common postpartum physical and emotional symptoms. •  Only 24% were prepared for urinary incontinence and less than

half were prepared to expect breastfeeding problems, hair loss, hemorrhoids, large mood swings or anxiety

• Providers may not want to worry women about problems they may not have.

• Women who perceived themselves as adequately prepared for postpartum had higher satisfaction with their physician or midwife and were more likely to return for their postpartum visit.

Howell, OB/GYN, 2010

Postpartum Preparation • Providers found their patients had inaccurate expectations

regarding severity of pain following delivery, amount of bleeding, changes in sex drive and not losing pregnancy weight right away

• Providers are focused on postpartum problems that

indicate serious conditions while women are more focused on the impact of symptoms on their daily functioning

• Women look to their providers for support and think it is

their role to link them with additional resources like lactation specialists and social workers

Mombaby.org

High-Risk Moms • Regaining Normality

•  This may be swift for some women making them feel much better than before (e.g. hyperemesis)

•  May not happen as hoped – particularly for women with pre- existing conditions that were aggravated by pregnancy

•  Feelings of Neglect or Abandonment •  Close monitoring and support during pregnancy followed by

immediate shift in focus on baby with little to no postpartum follow up

•  Future Threats to Health •  Fears about recurrence in future pregnancy •  Worries about longer-term impact on health •  Worries about risk for future chronic disease

Thomason et al (2014). Depress Anxiety.

Rigidity of maternal beliefs and postpartum depression symptoms

•  If my baby misbehaves, then others will think I am a bad mother

•  If my baby does not sleep well, it is a sign that I am not doing a good job as a mother

•  It is important to me that others think I’m a good parent

•  If I can’t calm my baby when s/he cries, then I am not a good parent

It’s Not Easy Being a Parent •  Many public health messages

competing for attention •  Safe Sleep / Sane Sleep •  Purple Period of Crying •  Breastfeeding •  Car seats •  Immunizations •  Early development

•  Potential info overload at antenatal classes and/or hospital discharge

•  Research is needed as to the timing of when information should be delivered and how.

It’s a Feminist Issue • Motherhood has also been described as “all-encompassing,

guilt-provoking, unrelenting, labor intensive and emotionally charged”

• Public expectation: happy with quick recovery • Workforce expectation: productive with quick recovery

•  Limited parental leave / sick leave / part time options • Society disregard for the labor of care (but day care is so

expensive) • Are we a society that is pro-birth or pro-mother/baby?

Postpartum Think Tank Meeting

• December 2014 • Employed systems-thinking (consumer, clinician,

payers, public health perspectives)

• Continuity of quality care is essential – preconception through prenatal care into postpartum and new parenting

• Need to shift the larger political will to invest in new mothers/families

• Mothers’ voices are critical = activate consumers and woman-centered care

• Metrics, measures and reimbursement matter

INFOGRAPHIC Which of these boxes reflects concerns you have for the women you serve? Which are new?

Solutions •  Integrated services and seamless care transitions from preconception through postpartum and well-baby

• Business, community, and government support, including paid parental leave, health insurance, and spaces for new parents to meet each other

• Mother-centered care, including quality visits on her schedule with complete and culturally appropriate information

Areas for Innovation • Home Visiting Programs • Well Child Check Ups • WIC Services • Systems Linkages • Social Media • New Partners (e.g. Parks & Rec) • Breastfeeding Friendly Businesses • Agency HR Policies • AND???

MomsRising.org

IDEAS FOR ACTION

How has your program begun to explore these solutions? What action steps will / could you or your organization/agency take to implement these solutions?

WORK IS UNDERWAY!

The 4th Trimester Project Goal:

•! To bring together patients, clinicians, researchers, and other stakeholders to define patient-centered research priorities in the first three months after birth, laying the groundwork for comparative effectiveness studies that will determine optimal practices to improve outcomes for mothers and infants.

Follow on Social Media: Website: 4thtrimester.web.unc.edu Facebook: http://j.mp/4thTriFB Twitter: @4thTriProject

Text4baby Service

text4baby

How Text4baby Works

26

Mom texts BABY/BEBE to 511411

Mom gives due date/DOB & zip code

Mom gets free tips 3x/week throughout pregnancy & until baby’s 1st birthday

Through text4baby, moms can also learn more about certain topics; get support for enrolling in Medicaid/CHIP; take quizzes; get urgent health alerts; sign up for appointments, WIC meetings and vaccination reminders; provide feedback on specific messages; and get connected to support hotlines.

27

Text4baby and Title V

Nat’l Performance Measure

Text4baby Alignment

1 Well woman visit +2 Low-risk cesarean delivery +3 Perinatal regionalization +4 Breastfeeding +5 Safe sleep +6 Developmental screening +7 Injury +8Physical activity n/a9 Bullying n/a

10 Adolescent well visit n/a11 Medical home +12 Transition n/a 13Oral health +14Smoking +15Adequate insurance

coverage

+

•  Text4baby has enrolled over 996,000 women

•  Text4baby’s content covers a broad range of priority topic areas that are aligned with 11 of the 15 Title V National Performance Measures for 2016-2020

•  Text4baby sends critical reminders about the importance of

•  Signing up for coverage •  Early prenatal visits •  Postpartum visits •  Well baby visits •  Vaccination adherence •  Prior pre-term identification •  Oral health visits •  Safe sleep guidance •  Breastfeeding guidance

AIM – Maternal Health • Goal: Prevent 1,000 maternal deaths and 100,000 cases

of SMM nationally by 2018

• Objective: Implement maternity safety bundles across birth facilities in 8 states over 4 years

•  Led by ACOG, funded by HRSA/MCHB

• States enrolled: FL, IL, LA, MD, MI, OK

• Bundle Development Underway: Postpartum Care Basics for Maternal Safety

• Process will launch Spring 2016; typically takes 10-12 weeks

AWHONN - Empowering Women to Obtain Needed Care •!Purpose: Develop standardized key messages for

postpartum women to promote awareness and understanding of the warning signs and symptoms of obstetric hemorrhage, severe hypertension, and venous thromboembolism.

•!Activities: •! Assess discharge education needs and gaps in materials •! Review the scientific literature •! Interview nurses in order to develop new ways to integrate

information into postpartum discharge teaching •! Pilot educational materials and discharge teaching tools at six

hospitals Pilot educational materials and discharge teaching tools at six

Merck for Mothers is supporting the development of an app to educate women in the US about health related matters after childbirth. This app will empower women to take responsibility for their own care and their newborn’s care in the critical weeks between giving birth and the six-week postpartum visit. The app will translate guidelines based on the latest evidence-based recommendations into an easily understandable, engaging format available via smartphone.

CMS Postpartum Care Action Learning Series •  10 states tested changes designed to improve the rate of

postpartum care visits among Medicaid/CHIP enrollees

•  Identified changes to improve postpartum care, including care coordination (esp. transitioning to FQHCs if Medicaid coverage lost), appointment reminders, home visits, provider education, clinical checklists, provider and/or staff incentives, transportation, and policy changes such as removing postpartum care from global billing

•  Focused on key aspects of health, such as contraception, chronic conditions, transitions to primary care, breastfeeding, and postpartum depression as part of the postpartum care visit

Community Care of North Carolina: Pregnancy Medical Home Postpartum and Well Woman Care

Postpartumprogress.com

Thank you!

Additional questions or comments?

Sarah Verbiest, DrPH, MSW, MPH sarahv@med.unc.edu 919.843.7865

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